Since many programs interpret input on the basis of lines, it is
convenient to have functions to read a line of text from a stream.
Standard C has functions to do this, but they aren't very safe: null
characters and even (for gets) long lines can confuse them. So
the GNU library provides the nonstandard getline function that
makes it easy to read lines reliably.
Another GNU extension, getdelim, generalizes getline. It
reads a delimited record, defined as everything through the next
occurrence of a specified delimiter character.
This function reads an entire line from stream, storing the text
(including the newline and a terminating null character) in a buffer
and storing the buffer address in *lineptr.
Before calling getline, you should place in *lineptr
the address of a buffer *n bytes long, allocated with
malloc. If this buffer is long enough to hold the line,
getline stores the line in this buffer. Otherwise,
getline makes the buffer bigger using realloc, storing the
new buffer address back in *lineptr and the increased size
back in *n.
See Unconstrained Allocation.
If you set *lineptr to a null pointer, and *n
to zero, before the call, then getline allocates the initial
buffer for you by calling malloc.
In either case, when getline returns, *lineptr is
a char * which points to the text of the line.
When getline is successful, it returns the number of characters
read (including the newline, but not including the terminating null).
This value enables you to distinguish null characters that are part of
the line from the null character inserted as a terminator.
This function is a GNU extension, but it is the recommended way to read
lines from a stream. The alternative standard functions are unreliable.
If an error occurs or end of file is reached without any bytes read,
getline returns -1.
This function is like getline except that the character which
tells it to stop reading is not necessarily newline. The argument
delimiter specifies the delimiter character; getdelim keeps
reading until it sees that character (or end of file).
The text is stored in lineptr, including the delimiter character
and a terminating null. Like getline, getdelim makes
lineptr bigger if it isn't big enough.
getline is in fact implemented in terms of getdelim, just
like this:
The fgets function reads characters from the stream stream
up to and including a newline character and stores them in the string
s, adding a null character to mark the end of the string. You
must supply count characters worth of space in s, but the
number of characters read is at most count − 1. The extra
character space is used to hold the null character at the end of the
string.
If the system is already at end of file when you call fgets, then
the contents of the array s are unchanged and a null pointer is
returned. A null pointer is also returned if a read error occurs.
Otherwise, the return value is the pointer s.
Warning: If the input data has a null character, you can't tell.
So don't use fgets unless you know the data cannot contain a null.
Don't use it to read files edited by the user because, if the user inserts
a null character, you should either handle it properly or print a clear
error message. We recommend using getline instead of fgets.
The fgetws function reads wide characters from the stream
stream up to and including a newline character and stores them in
the string ws, adding a null wide character to mark the end of the
string. You must supply count wide characters worth of space in
ws, but the number of characters read is at most count
− 1. The extra character space is used to hold the null wide
character at the end of the string.
If the system is already at end of file when you call fgetws, then
the contents of the array ws are unchanged and a null pointer is
returned. A null pointer is also returned if a read error occurs.
Otherwise, the return value is the pointer ws.
Warning: If the input data has a null wide character (which are
null bytes in the input stream), you can't tell. So don't use
fgetws unless you know the data cannot contain a null. Don't use
it to read files edited by the user because, if the user inserts a null
character, you should either handle it properly or print a clear error
message.
The fgetws_unlocked function is equivalent to the fgetws
function except that it does not implicitly lock the stream.
This function is a GNU extension.
— Deprecated function: char * gets (char *s)
The function gets reads characters from the stream stdin
up to the next newline character, and stores them in the string s.
The newline character is discarded (note that this differs from the
behavior of fgets, which copies the newline character into the
string). If gets encounters a read error or end-of-file, it
returns a null pointer; otherwise it returns s.
Warning: The gets function is very dangerous
because it provides no protection against overflowing the string
s. The GNU library includes it for compatibility only. You
should always use fgets or getline instead. To
remind you of this, the linker (if using GNU ld) will issue a
warning whenever you use gets.
Published under the terms of the GNU General Public License